'Despair': a Forgotten Rodin Sculpture on Piano Sells for One Million
'Despair'. A sculpture signed Rodin. ©© Rodin Museum Photographic Agency - Jérome Manoukian / Rodin museum official website

A marble sculpture believed to be a copy of Auguste Rodin’s work turned out to be an authentic, long-lost piece. It recently fetched one million dollars at auction in France after its stunning reidentification.

The owners thought the sculpture perched for years on the corner of a piano was a Rodin copy, but after being declared as the real thing, the small marble figure has now sold for one million dollars at auction, organizers said Monday.
Described as an "extremely rare" find by auction organizer Aymeric Rouillac, the figure was in fact an 1892 work, Despair by Auguste Rodin, that had gone missing after being sold at auction in 1906.
The work was put on sale over the weekend at an opening price of 500,000 euros but eventually sold for 860,000 euros (one million dollars), according to Rouillac.
The family had long believed the 28.5-centimeter (11-inch) figure of a sitting woman holding one foot was a copy of the legendary sculptor's work, said Rouillac.
After the owners approached Rouillac about another matter, he and his team spent months investigating the origin of the sculpture, including even looking into the family's origins.
He went to the Comité Rodin in March, and the body that is considered the leading authority on the French artist confirmed its authenticity six weeks later.
Rouillac said the committee found that Despair was sold at auction in 1906 and then disappeared from view. "So we have rediscovered it," he told AFP.

With AFP

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